Danville implosion hits a few snags
Dye House implosion
The Dan River Inc. Dye House was imploded around 10:20 a.m. on Wednesday. This is the view from the roof of Lou's Antique Shop on the corner of Memorial Drive and Main Street.
Traci White
The implosion of the Dan River Inc. Dye House and its smokestacks are seen Wednesday from the roof of Lou’s Antiques in Danville.
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It only took one big “boom!” and about 10 seconds for most of the former Dan River Inc. Dye House to disappear.
The planned implosion went off about 20 minutes late Wednesday morning and had a couple of hitches.
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An elevator shaft and stair tower that should have come down with the rest of the building remained standing after the blast, and one of the smokestacks fell the wrong way.
Danville Fire Marshal Shelby Irving had a front-row seat while she did the countdown for the implosion, which was conducted by Vintage Building Products from South Carolina.
“I thought everything went OK,” Irving said after the implosion, though she admitted she thought the elevator shaft was supposed to come down as well.
Irving said one of the smokestacks did not fall as planned, but it didn’t hurt anything.
“It fell toward an old rail trestle,” she said. “It wasn’t tall enough to hit any of the houses on the hill.”
Jerry Rigney, the city’s director of inspections, said the shaft and stair tower have steel I-beams in concrete from the roof to the ground.
“They were made to stand up to just about anything,” Rigney said. “The contractor will have a wrecking-ball crew in the first of the week to take it down.”
The smoke and dust from the implosion dissipated rapidly.
“I didn’t even get dirty,” Irving said. “It cleared out well.”
Rigney said the all-clear was given shortly after the blast, and people who had to leave nearby homes as a safety precaution were able to go home by 11 a.m.
While the implosion was handled by the contractor, many city departments had support roles, Rigney said.
The Human Resources Department arranged for residents in the area to go to the Salvation Army during the event, while the Danville Police Department handled traffic, and the Danville Fire Department, Public Works, Danville Utilities, the Inspections Division and other departments all had a hand in making the morning go smoothly.
“We were there for backup and to protect the citizens,” Rigney said.
Police along Memorial Drive had their hands full preventing people from stopping their cars in the middle of the road to watch, as well as keeping pedestrians from getting too close to the site.
Officers stayed busy near the bridges as well, with irate drivers complaining about detours and people trying to cross police lines to get closer to the blast. Some people even reportedly tried to sneak under the bridge and were moved out by police.
Lt. J.T. Henderson said no injuries were reported.
Danville resident Danny Gammon was among those that gathered downtown to watch the Dye House implosion.
“Textiles and tobacco made Danville,” he said. “My parents, aunt and uncles all worked there. I hate to see them tear it down, but it would take too much money to fix it up.”
Mike Owen said he worked his way through college at the mill, and his family worked at Dan River since the early 1900s.
“It’s a different world now,” he said as the Dye House came down.
• Contact Denice Thibodeau at or (434) 791-7985.
Reader Reactions
Eddie Izzard got it right:
“I come from Europe, where the history comes from. Seriously, you tear your history down. I saw a program recently, where people in Miami bragged that they had rebuilt this building to how it looked over FIFTY YEARS AGO. People were standing around saying “NO! Surely not! No one was even ALIVE then!“”
How sad— I will miss those towers.
They BOTCHED THE JOB! TYPICAL!
LOL That’s what you get for using Bud’s Discount Implosions and Septic Tank Cleaners…where we “Git R’ Done or your next implosion is free”!
It’s over but looks like part of the building didn’t go down! I wasn’t expecting the smoke stacks to go,was that part of the emplosion?
Last Weekend I was In Danville for the First time in six years.I saw all of the new merchants like Target,Dicks sporting goods etc.The mall was empty on a sunday.There was no traffic on Riverside drive.I think Danville has waited about 30 years to long to knock down those old buildings,and bring in the new.Ghost Town best sums it up!!
Let’er rip!...Robert say’s blow’em!!...He needs a new car lot. Maybe since the “retail hub” strategy won’t make it in today’s economy, Danville can become an implosion theme park. Think of the tourists coming to see such sights as the Masonic Temple, dropped in it’s spot. The old Register and Bee building *wink wink nod nod*...pulverized!...yeah baby yeah!
..and it’ll only be a few dozen poor people so who cares, right?
With my converstions with folks, the building has been gutted. That is why the delay. It was not ready on the 30th so they put it off. It may be a little dust. but not much.
I am ready to see it go. More buildings in Danville need to go. If not be implosion , either by a wrecking ball or a bull dozer
If I were living in one of the nearby houses on Riverside Drive, Highland Ct. or Farrar St., I would be extremely concerned about not only the damage that might be done to my home and property, but about the damage done to my health by the toxic dust cloud that will be created by this “event”. The dust from this implosion will contain mortar, rat droppings, bird droppings, chemicals from the various dyes used over 80 years of production, paint; much of it probably lead-based, not to mention the soot from those stacks and just general filth. That dust will settle in these people’s homes and I wonder why an implosion was decided the method to clear this building. I guess the rich get their way and the poor just get in the way.
Today: Toxic Dye-House Dust.
Tomorrow: Uranium Dust.
So next time will it be you who just “gets in the way”?
What are you all talking about? It has not happened yet. If you can’t be there. and have internet access, log on to the city of danville web page and watch it live. they will have it there. That is how i an viewing it. I am not getting out there in the cold.
Gone but not forgotton,now if they could just clean up the river that’s polluted so people could catch the fish and eat them…guess that will never happen…“sigh” oh well it was a thought,lots of catfish in that part of the river!
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